Drontal - Britain's number 1 wormer Home Caring for my cat Caring for my dog Health risks FAQs Reminder service Contact Sitemap
Bayer Animal Health
spacer you are here > home > caring for my dog > causes of worm infection > fleas
top
Overview
spacer
Types of worm
spacer
Causes of worm infection
spacer
Symptoms
spacer
Treatment
bottom

Bayer Global
Bayer HealthCare
Bayer UK/I

General Conditions of Use
Privacy Statement
Imprint

 

Causes of worm infection

Fleas

The link is the flea tapeworm (Dipylidium caninum). This worm lives in the dog’s gut, and when mature, starts shedding egg-filled body segments via the dog’s anus.

fleaThe eggs are eaten by flea larvae living in the dog’s bedding, carpets etc. The larvae then pupate, and when the adult fleas emerge, they are already infected with the immature stage of the tapeworm.

When your dog is bitten by an infected flea, it reacts quite naturally, by scratching, licking and biting – and as a result, often swallows the flea.

By this circuitous route, the tapeworm finds a new host – or re-infects the same one – and the cycle begins all over again.

To eliminate this particular worm, it is not enough to treat your dog. If you also have a flea problem, you must deal with this too, or the dog is certain to be re-infected.

Drontal will tackle the worms, but you should also ask your vet about effective flea control that treats both your pet and its surroundings.

Profile my pet



footer
home | caring for my cat | caring for my dog | health risks | FAQs | reminder service | contact spacer